Originally posted by cloughie
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The Lady Di interview
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Originally posted by muzzer View PostAgreed. The irony is that what it thinks is balance - being seen to criticise itself despite being the state broadcaster - is just seen as weakness in a society from which the reasonableness of the centre has been hollowed out and the PM lies daily. Auntie is self-harming and there seems to be nobody who can stop her.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostThis piece https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...-bbc-scapegoat about the role of the press in Diana's troubles, I thought corrected the balance well.
Now we're going to go about "cleaning up", "making sure it won't happen again", and "changing policies" and "lessons will be learnt" - but it will all come round again eventually.
Yes - it was very sad about Lady Di - but not all the problems were due to just one man and an interview.
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It would not at all surprise me if Prince William is indeed angry - or at least far from happy - with his father over what befell his mother; Prince Harry might be as well. That this has yet to be expressed directly in public unequivocal terms does not necessarily mean that it is not the case. I do, however, believe that Prince William's avowed desire to ensure that no part of the interview is ever relayed again is as misplaced as such showings are unpreventable.
As to the interview itself; there remains some disproportionate treatment as well as understandable chagrin. Yes, Bashir had no business to act as he did, although to what extent that was his idea and to what degree BBC or any other external influence played a part in it remain open to questions that will doubtless be asked over time. That said, a fair proportion of what Princess Diana said in the interview accords fairly well with what she had already previously told both her biographer Andrew Morton and Sir Max Hastings, then Daily Telegraph editor and therefore hardly constituted new revelations; it was merely the exposure on prime time BBC television that ratcheted it up to another level in general public consciousness.
Whilst there were indeed difficulties in relations between Princess Diana and members of the royal family, she did maintain correspondence with Prince Philip whose part in it seemed far from unsympathetic and disinterested.
I can only hope that the already beleaguered BBC does not come to find itself in a terminal firing line as a consequence of its part in the proceedings, its long term concealment of them, its subsequent rehiring of Bashir and the rest; it's already quite bad enough that the arts and arts education are being attacked and undermined by the present government but the possible additional prospect of BBC's demise and with it, Radio 3 and the BBC orchestras, is a most unwelcome one that some in certain offices might nevertheless relish...Last edited by ahinton; 22-05-21, 15:56.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostIt just amazes me that anyone is surprised by any of this. Surely many of us know that some journalists are opportunists and maybe devious in their approach to "getting the news out" - whatever "the news" actually is. In that respect they're not much different from some of the more mendacious politicians.
Now we're going to go about "cleaning up", "making sure it won't happen again", and "changing policies" and "lessons will be learnt" - but it will all come round again eventually.
Yes - it was very sad about Lady Di - but not all the problems were due to just one man and an interview.
(I seem to be getting more and more intolerant of interminable arguments which just go round and round these days - I never used to be like this! - ask my friends!)
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostIt's a gift to BJ - he is now guaranteed an easy ride.
But no one will hold that against him in this day and age...."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Postnot all the problems were due to just one man and an interview.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostExactly - we know all that: the question now is WHY, HOW, and under WHAT pressures these people are made to behave like puppets on the ends of strings... and what UNDERPINS those pressures. THEN we might start to get somewhere!
(I seem to be getting more and more intolerant of interminable arguments which just go round and round these days - I never used to be like this! - ask my friends!)
We are - haha - living in a democracy - so we elected people like BJ - and we also live in a competitive economy - so many of the "pressures" arise exactly out of the society we claim to be happy enough to live in. Probably better than Russia - with an elected President or the USA - also with an elected President. Our monarchy may be a sort of puppet face of the UK, but hopefully it's more benign than some of the elected officials in many countries around the world. The US has a great slogan "Government of the people, by the people, for the people", but I don't think in practice that works in many so-called democracies - or even in the UK.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostBut where do you want to get to? My view, which might now seem extreme, it that it may be best to let this fade into the dust. I don't agree that the interview should never be seen again. It is a historical document which should be kept, and made available to those with a serious interest and seen in contexts. I have little interest in answers to the questions you pose - a fairly pointless exercise - but that's just my opinion.
We are - haha - living in a democracy - so we elected people like BJ - and we also live in a competitive economy - so many of the "pressures" arise exactly out of the society we claim to be happy enough to live in. Probably better than Russia - with an elected President or the USA - also with an elected President. Our monarchy may be a sort of puppet face of the UK, but hopefully it's more benign than some of the elected officials in many countries around the world. The US has a great slogan "Government of the people, by the people, for the people", but I don't think in practice that works in many so-called democracies - or even in the UK.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostOur monarchy may be a sort of puppet face of the UK, but hopefully it's more benign than some of the elected officials in many countries around the world.
ADD: Listening to the Today clip about Humphrey Burton, I caught the discussion with Jonathan Dimbleby just before. He was pretty savage about Bashir, a "consummate conman and liar". But Dimbleby was the one who interviewed Prince Charles the year before which must have put some idea into Diana's head that she wanted her side of the story heard too. Whatever "trick" or deceit Bashir was guilty of, it obviously didn't need much effort to persuade her to give the interview - as she had said herself.Last edited by french frank; 22-05-21, 14:36.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostBut where do you want to get to?
My view, which might now seem extreme, it that it may be best to let this fade into the dust. I don't agree that the interview should never be seen again. It is a historical document which should be kept, and made available to those with a serious interest and seen in contexts. I have little interest in answers to the questions you pose - a fairly pointless exercise - but that's just my opinion.
We are - haha - living in a democracy - so we elected people like BJ - and we also live in a competitive economy - so many of the "pressures" arise exactly out of the society we claim to be happy enough to live in. Probably better than Russia - with an elected President or the USA - also with an elected President. Our monarchy may be a sort of puppet face of the UK, but hopefully it's more benign than some of the elected officials in many countries around the world. The US has a great slogan "Government of the people, by the people, for the people", but I don't think in practice that works in many so-called democracies - or even in the UK.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostBut where do you want to get to? My view, which might now seem extreme, it that it may be best to let this fade into the dust. I don't agree that the interview should never be seen again. It is a historical document which should be kept, and made available to those with a serious interest and seen in contexts. I have little interest in answers to the questions you pose - a fairly pointless exercise - but that's just my opinion.
We are - haha - living in a democracy - so we elected people like BJ - and we also live in a competitive economy - so many of the "pressures" arise exactly out of the society we claim to be happy enough to live in. Probably better than Russia - with an elected President or the USA - also with an elected President. Our monarchy may be a sort of puppet face of the UK, but hopefully it's more benign than some of the elected officials in many countries around the world. The US has a great slogan "Government of the people, by the people, for the people", but I don't think in practice that works in many so-called democracies - or even in the UK.
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